Configured browsers are opening as virgins

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  1. Posts : 12
    W7 Pro
       #1

    Configured browsers are opening as virgins


    The recent build of Win7 on a new laptop is opening virgin browsers instead of the configured browsers.

    Chrome Portable and Firefox Portable have personal preferences set and uBlocks Origin installed. Firefox is the default browser.

    The new build has peculiar behavior.

    - Double Click on Shortcut and Firefox config opens
    - Click on a link in Thunderbird and Firefox virgin opens (even if Firefox config is already open)
    - CMD filename.htm is opened by Firefox virgin (even if Firefox config is already open)

    This is a twin to the install on the old laptop, where links are always opened in configured Firefox.

    New System:
    Open Firefox shortcut twice: Firefox config and Firefox virgin
    Open Chrome shortcut twice: Chrome config and Chrome virgin

    Old System:
    Open Firefox shortcut twice: Firefox config and Firefox config
    Open Chrome shortcut twice: Chrome config and Chrome config

    Can anyone point me to a switch which tells Win7 to only open the configured browser?
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 0
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #2

    If you are trying to use a portable browser to be the default browser, then you'd have to more than likely have to set up the default program to handle what ever file type you'd want Firefox portable to open. So if you want FF to open an HTML file then set that in the default programs. XML, etc would be the same.

    To get to the default programs settings, start typing default programs in search under the start orb.

    Another thing you need to know about portable browsers is that they come with an ini file that has options. If you have FF or Chrome physically installed then you need to set the correct integer value a 1 or 0 in the ini file so that the portable version doesn't muck up with your physical install. You can open the ini file with Notepad or Notepad ++.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 6,021
    Win 7 HP SP1 64-bit Vista HB SP2 32-bit Linux Mint 18.3
       #3

    Hi F22 Simpilot,

    F22 Simpilot said:
    If you are trying to use a portable browser to be the default browser, then you'd have to more than likely have to set up the default program to handle what ever file type you'd want Firefox portable to open. So if you want FF to open an HTML file then set that in the default programs. XML, etc would be the same.

    To get to the default programs settings, start typing default programs in search under the start orb.

    Another thing you need to know about portable browsers is that they come with an .ini file that has options. If you have FF or Chrome physically installed then you need to set the correct integer value a 1 or 0 in the .ini file so that the portable version doesn't muck up with your physical install. You can open the ini file with Notepad or Notepad ++.
    That's very interesting, I didn't know that. Thanks for sharing!
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 12
    W7 Pro
    Thread Starter
       #4

    "If you are trying to use a portable browser to be the default browser, then you'd have to more than likely have to set up the default program to handle what ever file type you'd want Firefox portable to open. So if you want FF to open an HTML file then set that in the default programs. XML, etc would be the same."

    The act of making Firefox the default does all of the associations. Changing the default in the browser to Chrome does not change these associations, and Chrome does not appear in the default program list. It is a one-time event.

    "Another thing you need to know about portable browsers is that they come with an ini file that has options. If you have FF or Chrome physically installed then you need to set the correct integer value a 1 or 0 in the ini file so that the portable version doesn't muck up with your physical install. You can open the ini file with Notepad or Notepad ++."

    There is no physical install, and browsers use profiles, not .ini's.

    Chrome has seven .ini files. Two have a current date. Neither of these has config settings.

    Firefox has 19 .ini files. Only three have current dates and FirefoxPortableSettings.ini only has the address of the last profile directory used. Firefox can have several profiles, I only have one.

    There is one .exe, there is one profile for each browser.

    Double click a browser shortcut, and the first instance is configured, the second double click opens a virgin instance, the third instance double click opens a virgin instance, the....

    Every instance of a browser is a virgin except the first double click from the shortcut.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 0
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #5

    Do this for XML, HTML files, etc for what ever browser you want.



      My Computer


  6. Posts : 12
    W7 Pro
    Thread Starter
       #6

    As I said previously, "The act of making Firefox the default does all of the associations." The htm/html associations start out as IE, but making Firefox the default browser changes them to Firefox.



    The question I am trying to solve is why two different instances of Firefox open .HTM depending on where it is.



    The CMD line .HTM opens a different instance than clicking on .HTM in Thunderbird.



    I am trying to find out how/why there are two different instances of both Chrome and Firefox co-existing in my system. One of them has all the configuration/preferences/extensions and the other does not.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 1,384
    Win 7 Ult 64-bit
       #7

    Are you talking about maintaining settings and extensions that have already been set in your FF and Chrome profiles?

    Why are you double-clicking on each program 2 or 3 times? That would produce multiple instances of each program.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 12
    W7 Pro
    Thread Starter
       #8

    "Are you talking about maintaining settings and extensions that have already been set in your FF and Chrome profiles?"

    No.

    "Why are you double-clicking on each program 2 or 3 times? That would produce multiple instances of each program."

    That's the point, it produces multiple instances but they are NOT the same instance! The first DC opens configured Firefox, the second DC opens virgin Firefox. If it was only Firefox I would be looking for a Firefox problem but the same thing is happening with Chrome.

    This is portable Firefox/Chrome, not installed.
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 0
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #9

    Where did you download both browsers?
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 12
    W7 Pro
    Thread Starter
       #10

    portableapps.com
      My Computer


 
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